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BIOCHEMICAL THERAPY SUCCESSFULLY TREATS ASSAULTIVE BEHAVIOR
Identifying and correcting biochemical abnormalities
can dramatically reduce violent behavior, according to a
new study by William Walsh and colleagues.
Walsh et al. followed 207 consecutive patients with
behavior disorders, all treated at the Pfeiffer Treatment
Center. The patients, who ranged in age from 3 to 55
and included 149 males and 58 females, had received
diagnoses of attention-deficit disorder, conduct disorder,
oppositional-defiant disorder, or other behavior
disorders. Ninety-five percent had previously undergone
behavior modification, psychotherapy, conflict resolution
therapy, or counseling, and 85 percent had undergone
treatment with Ritalin, antidepressants, or other
psychotropic drugs, but these treatments had been
unsuccessful.
All patients received testing to identify problems
including metal-metabolism disorders, methylation
problems, disordered pyrrole chemistry, heavy metal
overload, malabsorption syndromes, and impaired
glucose regulation. Each patient then underwent an
individualized program of nutritional supplementation to
remediate identified biochemical abnormalities.
Following each patient for four to eight months after
treatment began, the researchers found that 76 percent
complied with therapy. (Half of the noncompliant group
never began the therapy, while the other half complained
of nausea, vomiting, or a dislike of swallowing pills.)
In the treatment-compliant group, the researchers say, "A
reduced frequency of assaults was reported by 92
percent of. assaultive patients, with 58 percent
achieving elimination of the behavior."
Eighty-eight
percent of compliant patients with destructive behavior
reported a reduced frequency of destructive acts, with 53
percent reporting a complete cessation of destructive
behavior. Younger patients responded the most
positively to treatment.
These results, Walsh et al. say, strongly indicate that
individually tailored biochemical interventions can cause
significant improvement in patients with chronic behavior
problems. "The high incidence of biochemical
imbalances in the behavior-disordered population and
the major behavioral improvements following the
correction of these imbalances suggest that individual
biochemistry has a powerful influence on human
behavior," they conclude. "Effective prevention of
delinquency and crime may require early interventions
aimed at normalizing the body chemistries of high-risk
children."
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"Reduced violent behavior following biochemical therapy,"
W. J. Walsh, L. B. Glab, and M. L. Haakenson, Physiology
and Behavior, Vol. 82, No. 5, October 15, 2004, 835-9.
Address: William Walsh, Pfeiffer Treatment Center, 4575
Weaver Parkway, Warrenville, IL 60555.
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